Warning: Undefined array key "rbname" in /data/rantburg.com/www/rantburg/pgrecentorg.php on line 14
Hello !
Recent Appearances... Rantburg

India-Pakistan
DG Rangers admits deceased MQM worker was tortured during custody
2016-05-04
[DAWN] Director General (DG) Rangers Major General Bilal Akber accepted that the dear departed MQM worker was tortured by Rangers in jug and vowed that strict action will be taken against those responsible for misconduct.

Talking to DawnNews on Tuesday night, Akbar accepted that Aftab Ahmed was tortured during custody and the standard operating procedures were not followed by some Rangers personnel in this case.

The DG Rangers assured that strict action will be taken against those responsible for this misconduct but maintained that Aftab's death had occurred due to a heart attack.

The statement comes after pictures and videos were seen doing rounds on the social media, reportedly showing the corpse of the dear departed MQM worker having major torture marks across his body.

Earlier in the day, a Mutahidda Qaumi Movement (MQM) leader claimed that a party member, said to be the coordinator of senior MQM leader Dr Farooq Sattar, died in the custody of Rangers.

"Aftab Ahmed died during Rangers custody as he was detained for 90 days for no reason," MQM spokesperson Wasay Jalil said in a tweet.

Link


India-Pakistan
MQM leader's assassin arrested, say Rangers
2015-09-24
[DAWN] Rangers on Wednesday said they tossed in the calaboose
You have the right to remain silent...
a suspected hit man responsible for taking out Mutahidda Qaumi Movement (MQM) MPA Manzar Imam in a raid conducted Tuesday night in Taiser town area of Bloody Karachi
...formerly the capital of Pakistain, now merely its most important port and financial center. It is among the largest cities in the world, with a population of 18 million, most of whom hate each other and many of whom are armed and dangerous...
.

In statement issued by the paramilitary force's front man, the paramilitary force leading a security operation in Karachi said suspected murderer Muhammad Ashiq is also affiliated with the MQM, adding he confessed to killing Manzar Imam and his guards on January 17, 2013.

Ashiq is also involved in killing 12 other individuals from other political parties, said the statement, adding that the suspect would dump dead bodies of his victims using a Khidmat-e-Khalq Foundation (KKF) ambulance.

The arrested hit man was produced in an Anti-Terrorism Court Wednesday, which approved a 90-day remand in Rangers custody.

MQM MPA Manzar Imam, along with his police guards was killed in January 2013 when four gunnies on cycle of violences opened fire on his vehicle in Orangi town's Hyderi Chowk area. At that time, the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistain (TTP) had grabbed credit for the killing of the provincial politician, a front man for the banned outfit had told Dawn.com.
Link


India-Pakistan
Social media latest weapon of attack against Lal Masjid activist
2014-12-29
[DAWN] The standoff between civil society and Lal Masjid cleric Abdul Aziz has taken another alarming turn. Following threats from militant groups, organisers of the protests are now being targeted by a social media campaign that could endanger their lives.

Mohammad Jibran Nasir, the Karachi-based lawyer and rights activist who has been at the forefront of the movement that aims to ‘reclaim Lal Masjid’, is being called a non-Muslim and an Ahmadi. Posts on social networking sites such as Twitter and Facebook featuring photos of Jibran participating in Holi celebrations are being used as ‘proof’ of his anti-Muslim allegiances.

However, the defiant Mr Nasir stands firm. In a message sent from his Twitter account, he responded to the allegations, saying, “I own my allegiance to human rights. Sunni, Shia, Ahmadi, [Christian], Hindu, Parsi… whoever, I will continue to advocate human rights for all. (sic)”

Organisers of protests against Lal Masjid, who are expected to meet a member of the federal cabinet on Monday to press for their demands, are considering holding a press conference to respond to these allegations.

There is fear among certain circles that accusations against Mr Nasir could be life-threatening, as saying that someone is an Ahmadi in Pakistan is tantamount to inciting violence against that person. The recent killing of Luqman Ahmad Shehzad, an Ahmadi man who was shot in the head near the Bhiri Shah Rehman village in Gujranwala, has also heightened concerns for Mr Nasir’s safety.

This concern is evident from another tweet from Mr Nasir’s account, which says “The whole Lal Masjid & Jamia Hafsa is directing their resources towards a social media campaign against us. Can all of u ppl help us respond? (sic)”

Following the attack in Peshawar on December 16 in which 142 students and teachers were killed, the head of Lal Masjid Maulana Abdul Aziz gave a controversial statement in refusing to condemn the killing of innocent children and said that he does not consider them martyrs. Angered by the Maulana’s statement, members of civil society began protesting in front of Lal Masjid.

After two consecutive days of protests, Abdul Aziz threatened the protesters leading them to file a First Information Report (FIR) against him.

On Friday (December 26) the district court issued a non-bailable arrest warrant for Abdul Aziz.

Members of civil society approached various political personalities requesting them to ensure the arrest of Maulana Aziz. On Friday, civil society activists met with senators from four different parties and had plans to meet a federal minister on Monday.

Civil society activist Shan Taseer while talking to Dawn said that for the last two days, some people had been campaigning on social media against Jibran Nasir and claiming that Mr Nasir is Ahmadi.

“We are considering holding a press conference to clarify that he is not Ahmadi because in the prevailing situation calling someone Ahmadi can instigate murder,” he said.

“We want to clarify that Jibran is not an Ahmadi. Moreover, he is not the only person who started the campaign. In fact there are number of people who see Abdul Aziz’s statements and actions as being derogatory and unlawful,” he said.

Shan Taseer said no one has the right to decide whether another person is a Muslim or not.

“A so-called religious scholar is promoting hatred against Ahmadis on electronic media which can be a part of the conspiracy,” he said.

He added that some elements initially threatened Jibran Nasir and are now hiding behind religion to attack him. “We planned to meet politicians and will continue to do so,” he said.

Senator Syed Tahir Hussain Mashhadi from Mutahidda Qaumi Movement said the campaign against Jibran Nasir is deplorable.

“Maulana Abdul Aziz is using sectarianism. First he accused Shias of conspiring against him and later said Ahmadis were conspiring against him,” he said.

Senator Mashhadi said Jamia Hafsa, the women’s seminary at Lal Masjid, has openly expressed support for the leader of Islamic State of Iraq and Sham (ISIS) Sheikh Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi but the government is silent about it.

“If the government cannot take action against one person, how can we expect it to eradicate terrorism from an entire country,” he said.
Link


India-Pakistan
MQM man among three shot dead in Karachi
2013-12-07
[Pak Daily Times] In an ongoing spate of violence across the city, another three people including an activist of Mutahidda Qaumi Movement bit the dust in different incidents on Friday.

In the first incident, a worker of the MQM was bumped off in an alleged murder in Landhi. The victim was identified as 45-year-old Aslam Ansari, son of Majeed Ansari. The police said that the dear departed was sitting near his residence when at least two men on a cycle of violence accosted and opened fire. The body was shifted to the Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre. The dear departed ran his own shoe factory. The initial investigation also suggested that he was a former worker of the Mohajir Qaumi Movement-Haqiqi and later joined MQM after submitting an apology letter. The motive behind the incident is yet to be ascertained.

A private construction company's employee was rubbed out in Federal B Area near the Gulberg cop shoppe.

The dear departed was identified as Muhammad Qasim, 44, son of Muhammad Baksh. He was on his way home in North Nazimabad after dropping his son to a school in Gulshan-e-Iqbal when gunnies shot and killed him. The police on behalf of his brother, Ashiq, have started the paperwork but haven't done much else against unidentified persons.

A 27-year-old Barkatullah was killed in Ahsanabad within the remits of Sohrab Goth cop shoppe. The police said the dear departed used to work at a flourmill in Ahsanabad and he was killed by the mill's watchman, Omer Hayat, after an exchange of hot words. The police have placed in durance vile
Drop the gat, Rocky, or you're a dead 'un!
the accused. They also found a decomposed body from the bushes of Cantonment railway station.
Link


India-Pakistan
ANP wants lasting solution to Karachi crisis
2012-12-11
[Dawn] Showing concern over lawlessness in Bloody Karachi
...formerly the capital of Pakistain, now merely its most important port and financial center. It may be the largest city in the world, with a population of 18 million, most of whom hate each other and many of whom are armed and dangerous...
, Awami National Party president Asfandyar Wali Khan has asked President Asif Ali Ten Percent Zardari
... husband of the late Benazir Bhutto, who has been singularly lacking in curiosity about who done her in ...
to convene a meeting of all stakeholders to find out permanent solution to the crisis-like situation in the port city.

"Bloody Karachi is mini-Pakistain and the situation (there) is very serious and intolerable. Therefore, President Zardari should bring all stakeholders to the negotiation table to meticulously discuss the issue and work out a durable solution," he told a presser at Chief Minister's House after presiding over party provincial working committee meeting on Sunday.

The ANP chief said that all stakeholders should put their heads together and hold serious debate on Bloody Karachi. The number of stakeholders involved in Bloody Karachi issue was increasing day by day, he said.

He said that every Urdu speaker in Bloody Karachi should not be considered worker of Mutahidda Qaumi Movement and every Pakhtun should not be treated as member of ANP.

"I have personally discussed Bloody Karachi situation with President Zardari recently and suggested him to work out sustainable solution," Mr Khan said, adding that new delimitations and preparation of new voter lists ordered by the Supreme Court might change the scenario in Bloody Karachi.

The ANP president, who remained out of media for long time due to his illness, spoke elaborately on Afghanistan. He was optimistic that situation would remain normal after NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. A single organization with differing goals, equipment, language, doctrine, and organization....
's pullout from the war-torn country in 2014. He termed release of Taliban leaders by Pak government a major and positive step.

"I am optimistic that at least there will be no sustained or organised war against state institutions in Afghanistan in the coming days. However,
today is that tomorrow you were thinking about yesterday...
stopping murder of individuals would take time," he said.

The ANP chief urged Pakistain and Afghanistan to adopt confidence building measures, end mistrust and go for actionable intelligence sharing. To a question about Afghan government's allegations that Pakistain was interfering in its internal affairs, he said that both neighbours should stop the blame game and build trust.
Link


India-Pakistan
Senate adopts resolution asking govt to deweaponise Karachi
2012-11-20
[Dawn] The Senate on Monday passed a resolution with majority asking the government to deweaponise Bloody Karachi
...formerly the capital of Pakistain, now merely its most important port and financial center. It may be the largest city in the world, with a population of 18 million, most of whom hate each other and many of whom are armed and dangerous...
in view of the prevailing law and order situation in the metropolis.

The senators of Mutahidda Qaumi Movement (MQM) were caught napping when the resolution was put for voting as only Col. (Retd) Tahir Hussain Mashhadi opposed the passage of the resolution and said instead of deweaponisation of Bloody Karachi, the whole of Pakistain should be deweaponised.

However,
if you can't be a good example, then you'll just have to be a horrible warning...
Chairman Senate Syed Nayyar Hussain Bukhari rejected the proposal, stating that Mashhadi was not even backed by his own colleagues.

Apparently, the MQM senators were happy with the reconciliatory gesture of Senator Azam Khan Hoti of the Awami National Party (ANP) who had shacked hands with MQM leader Babar Khan Ghauri for peace in Bloody Karachi.

The resolution was moved by Senator Shahi Syed of the ANP on April 30.

Earlier, taking part in the debate, Mushahidullah Khan of Pakistain Mohammedan League-Nawaz (PML-N) regretted the fact that Imambargahs and Mosques were being attacked during the holy month of Muharram and the people were not being provided with adequate security.

He said that no one was Shia or Sunni among the general public and the vested interests were on to keep the people divided.
Link


India-Pakistan
Karachi situation: Ruling parties blaming Taliban to hide own failings: Sherpao
2012-11-10
[Dawn] Qaumi Watan Party chairman Aftab Ahmed Khan Sherpao has blamed the ruling parties for the deteriorating law and order situation in Bloody Karachi
...formerly the capital of Pakistain, now merely its most important port and financial center. It may be the largest city in the world, with a population of 18 million, most of whom hate each other and many of whom are armed and dangerous...
Both Awami National Party and Mutahidda Qaumi Movement were exploiting people for their ulterior motives by using the name of Taliban, he told a presser at his residence in Hayatabad here on Thursday.

A number of tribal elders belonging to South Wazoo and Orakzai agencies and Dera Ismail Khan
... the Pearl of Pashtunistan ...
announced joining QWP during the presser.

Mr Sherpao alleged that ruling parties including Pakistain People's Party were using the name of Taliban to get more space in Bloody Karachi and hide their weaknesses and mysterious activities.

He said that ultimate sufferers would be Pakhtuns if an operation was launched in Bloody Karachi or in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa
... formerly NWFP, still Terrorism Central...
and tribal areas. He said that law and order problem was created for political motives and it should be resolved on political basis.

The QWP chief stressed the need for devising an effective strategy for security of the region if NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. A cautionary tale of cost-benefit analysis....
forces were withdrawn from Afghanistan in 2014. He said that rulers had failed to give proper attention to the post-2014 scenario in the region.

"In case the government fails to devise a plan for the post-withdrawal scenario (in Afghanistan) the result will be devastating for Pakhtuns," Mr Sherpao feared. He said that government had ignored tribal people because neither the president nor prime minister visited Fata during the last four years.

The QWP chief said that government had deliberately given up pursuing the peace policies initiated by him when he was interior minister. He said that Pak-Afghan Jirga had helped in minimising anti-Pakistain sentiments in Afghanistan.

That jirga was helpful in restoration of peace in the region but unfortunately the government did not implement the decisions taken during its different sessions, he said.

Mr Sherpao said that flawed policies of government and military operations in Fata resulted in displacement of about 0.8 million people, who were leading a miserable life.

"Military operations are not solution to the problem. The government must take all political parties and tribal elders on board before taking any decision regarding tribal areas," he said.
Link


India-Pakistan
Blackout riots rock Karachi
2009-07-20
One man was killed as police opened fire on people protesting against load shedding near the Karachi Electric Supply Company (KESC) office in Hyderi on Sunday, while angry protesters in other parts of the city attacked the house of
A man named Hassam was killed when police allegedly opened fire on a mob protesting against excessive load shedding.
Petroleum Adviser Dr Asim Hussain and a police checkpost.

A man named Hassam was killed when police allegedly opened fire on a mob protesting against excessive load shedding, a private TV channel reported. After the incident, KESC officials called Rangers to guard the company's installations. Meanwhile, angry protesters pelted the house of Petroleum Adviser Dr Asim Hussain with stones, while shouting slogans against load shedding. The protesters dispersed after police fired teargas shells at them.

In North Nazimabad, infuriated protesters blocked the Landhi Kotak Chorangi Road with burning tyres and shouted slogans against the KESC administration, another private TV channel reported. The rioters attacked vehicles of MNAs Salahuddin and Farha Khan of the Mutahidda Qaumi Movement, while another angry mob attacked a police checkpost and snatched ammunition from the constable on duty.
Link


Afghanistan/South Asia
Will Musharraf ban Jamaat-e-Islami and JUI?
2005-08-29
My guess is no. The important people like to keep their options open by having all sorts of political groups hang around in case they prove useful in the future.
Following widespread allegations that some elements within the Jamaat-e Islami and Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam may have links with Al Qaeda, Pakistani intelligence agencies have been spurred into action. If these allegations are proved, they could lead to a worldwide ban on the two parties.
That would be a reasonable course, but I can't see it happening, either. They have too much power in Pakland to allow themselves to be suppressed — at least for now. I think Perv has succeeded in weakening them, with their own assistance.
The development could also mean the end of the MMA government in the NWFP and the falling out of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Q with the MMA in Balochistan where the two share a coalition government. For their part the JI and JUIF leaders have lashed out at the government.
But since they've made a career of that, how much notice is actually being taken?
The two parties say the government has mischievously spread the word that religious parties may be banned the world over if their links with Al Qaeda and terror activities are proven. However, leaders of the two parties say the claims of terror links are nothing but “rumours” and are a part of the government’s drive against the religious parties.
JI's involvement with Hizbul is mere rumor. The fact that many Qaeda thugs have been extricated from safe houses belonging to JI members is mere rumor. Sami's involvement with the Talibs is mere rumor.
Sources also say these allegations against religious parties could be a result of the Mutahidda Qaumi Movement’s constant demand that the JI be banned and leaders of Islami Jamiat-e-Tulaba be arrested. “JI should have been banned long ago because it is responsible for introducing the culture of terrorism in Pakistan,” MQM leader Dr Farooq Sattar told TFT. “We [MQM] have been demanding a ban on JI and other extremist parties for a long time now and will welcome such moves.”
In a world built on logic and reason that'd be a mere statement of the obvious.
Sources say the recent deportation of JUI leader Maulana Fazlur Rehman from Dubai had much to do with reports of his party’s alleged links with terrorist organisations and investigations into JUI-backed madrassahs. Rehman, however, blames the Pakistan government for the deportation and says he is only keeping silent about the issue because he does not want to harm the national interest, though he did come up with allegations about how Islamabad was backing the Taliban and launching them into Afghanistan.
It's amazing what slips out when the Lord High Fundos are in a fit of high dudgeon...
“If a ban is placed on the JI and JUI, their leaders will be completely prohibited from travelling abroad,” said a government source. “The government has also ordered a separate inquiry into JUI’s links with Tripoli. Fazlur Rehman and his party have age-old links with Libya whose nature Rehman now has to explain.
I'd guess his response will consist of bluster and walkouts. That does explain why he hasn't stayed bought, though...
Leaders from Lashkar-e-Taiba, Hizb-ut Tahrir, Jaish-e Mohammad and Tableeghi Jamaat could also be banned from travelling abroad,” he added.
That would certainly be a relief for the rest of the world. But I can't see it happening. Pakland has nothing else to export.
Reports available with TFT say that in the late 1980s, government security agencies conducted investigations into the alleged funding of the JUP and JUI from elements in Iraq and Libya respectively. The investigation was started after JUI and JUP leaders made a number of “suspicious” trips to these countries but nothing became of the probe which was conducted at a time when the regime was pro-religious and openly backed the mujahideen.
But I notice they didn't throw the records away.
Now, following the recent bombings in London, Pakistani, British and American intelligence agencies have started investigating all organisations that have been sending religious students to Islamic seminaries abroad. In the last three years, thousands of madrassah students, including Pakistanis, have travelled to madrassahs around the globe.
There is actually more of this sort of movement, I'd guess, than the combined intel agencies can keep up with. Probably the majority of the movement consists of drones, with no significance. Maybe 20 to 30 percent will be various levels of bad guys, moving for nefarious purposes.
As for the recent LB polls, sources say President Pervez Musharraf is likely to reach an understanding with the Awami National Party (ANP) in NWFP and with the nationalist parties in Balochistan to replace the MMA in the two provinces. However, Musharraf’s failure to reach a compromise with mainstream liberal and secular parties like the Pakistan Peoples Party Parliamentarians and Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz may push these two parties closer to the JI and JUI. In fact, the Alliance for Restoration of Democracy (ARD) comprising the PPPP and PML-N as well as several other smaller parties recently reached an agreement with the MMA to launch a combined movement against Musharraf’s government.
The Awami National Party is a Pashtun leftist party, one opposed to Talibanisation and the Jihadis and close to America. It seems likely to be in the new Peshwar government. The Baluchi nationalists are also leftists opposed to Talibanisation, but they are also hostile to the Pak military so palms will probably be greased to make that work.
Link


Afghanistan/South Asia
MQM makes use of Balochistan crisis
2005-01-21
Anna Comnena has been busy
Altaf Hussain seems to be playing a complex game but at the end of the day is likely to remain within the government rather than opting out

As the crisis in Balochistan continues, the one party that seems to be trying to draw political mileage out of it is the ethnic Mutahidda Qaumi Movement. Recently, its exiled leader Altaf Hussain announced that he would consider walking out of the government if the army launched an operation in Balochistan. But while the announcement has gone down well with the Baloch, it hasn't amused Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, president of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Q who shot back saying the government wouldn't fall even if the MQM were to quit. To make his threat credible, Altaf Hussain personally contacted Nawab Akbar Bugti, chief of the Jamhoori Watan Party and assured him of his support, besides reiterating that the MQM would quit the present government both at the Centre and in Sindh in case of a military operation in Balochistan. Baloch leaders like Bugti and Attaullah Mengal have lauded the MQM announcement for being "timely" and the first of such a nature by any major politico-nationalist party. However, observers question the motives behind Altaf Hussain's announcement. "It is all part of a game to gain popular support and credibility," says an analyst. "He is getting too much out of this coalition to want to throw it away."

From the way it looks, Altaf Hussain is playing a more complex game than simply holding out a threat that he says he intends to carry out. The MQM has been at the short end of the military's stick since the 1992 army operation in Sindh and it is only in the past three years that it has made its peace with the army. It has the lion's share of ministries in the Sindh government and is spoiling to contest this year's municipal polls. The party had boycotted the first election under the new plan and has since had to bear the consequences of what it later described as an ill-thought decision. But the red rag for the MQM bull would be any move that could bring the PPP close to the army. For a number of reasons that could become the only viable course for Islamabad were Hussain to actually carry out his threat. The likelihood is that he knows Islamabad is showing force in Balochistan rather than actually intending to use it. Given this it makes sense for him to play his cards in a way that he can sidle up to the Baloch nationalists.

In fact, as one analyst told TFT, Altaf Hussain seems to have made a smarter move compared to the Mutahidda Majlis-e-Amal which has remained taciturn on the Baloch issue. "It almost seems like they are fine with a military operation in Balochistan," says this analyst. It is possible that the MMA sees the present standoff as being to its advantage especially if it pits the army against the nationalists and by doing that weaken both the sides. Altaf knows that he holds a key position in Sindh — it has 42 seats in the Sindh assembly and 18 in the NA — and the provincial chief minister, Arbab Ghulam Rahim, depends heavily on the MQM legislators. However, if the push came to a shove, the government could always co-opt the PPPP. Of course, that would also change the entire hue of the political game.
Link


Afghanistan/South Asia
Karachi: A history of it’s politics and violence
2004-05-21
EFL
Karachi has gone from bad to worse. There is no other way to describe the city’s woes and its downslide since 1984. Foreigners are generally advised by their governments to “avoid visiting Karachi” Recently, the Indian cricket team refused to play a Test match here, as did South Africa and New Zealand. A Dutch company, which has been working in Karachi for the past few years, has decided to ‘pack-up’ and leave. The Dutch company’s decision came a week before a suicide bomb attack in an imambargah killed 19 people and injured around 80. The suicide bomber has since been identified as a ‘policeman’. A few days later, 10 people were killed and 20 others injured in an armed attack allegedly involving the activists of Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) and the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP). The growing violence threatens to plunge Karachi back to the eighties and early nineties when the city was on fire.
MMA is mostly Pashtun based, the PPP is a secular party appealing to Sindhis, and the MQM is the party of Indian migrants to Pakistan.

Karachi, the city of 14-million people, has witnessed constant bloodshed since 1984. An estimated 5,000 people have been killed in political, ethnic and sectarian violence. The violence has resulted in sharp decline in foreign and local investment. Many believe the decision to shift the capital to Islamabad from Karachi contributed to an emphasis away from Karachi. Even so Karachi retained it pride of place as the melting pot of Pakistan and as its financial capital. Karachi remained the city of colour and culture till the mid 70s. The city once had some 70 cinema-houses, nightclubs, bars and other entertainment outlets. Today, the city hardly has 10 cinema-houses and, of course, no nightclubs or bars since they were banned by Mr Bhutto in 1977. Over the years the city has also seen a rise in the population of aliens. It started with the Afghan refugees but now includes Bangladeshis, Sri Lankans, Burmese and even some Africans. This has resulted in higher crime rates and slum dwellings. Karachi today houses thousands of slum-cities including Asia’s biggest slum-city, the Orangi Town. There are some 0.5 million Bengalis, one million Afghans and some 0.5 million other foreign nationals like Burmese, Palestinians, Jordanians etc. Police sources, however, say the aliens are not involved in terrorist attacks, which are mounted by either the locals or Pakistanis from Punjab, Frontier or Hazara. The Baloch and Sindhis are primarily into car-lifting and kidnapping for ransom. Even so, some intelligence officials believe hired killers could possibly be drawn from among the aliens.
These foreigners make a fertile recruiting ground for Jihadis, especially Laskar-e-Taiba, allowing them to extend their reach to countries like Burma and Bangladesh that have little Pakistani presence.

Karachi has been caught in the grip of sectarian violence since the early days of former military ruler General Zia-ul-Haq. In 1978, some 14 people were killed in sectarian riots after a dispute broke out on the procession of a mosque in Golimar. House to house fighting was witnessed following mass attacks on mosques and imambargahs; some of these prayer places were set on fire. Into the fray entered organisations like the Shia Tehreek-e-Nifaz-e-Fiqah-e-Jafria (TNFJ), later rechristened the Tehrik-e Jafaria Pakistan and Swad-e-Azam. Though the leaders of both these groups belong to the people from Hazara or NWFP, they have established their bases in Karachi. This has led to an intensification of sectarian clashes in the city.
Ethnic, Political and religous groups with their own militias aren’t exactly a good recipe for peace.

The Zia era also saw increase in campus violence in Karachi. JI, which supported Zia till he banned the students unions, used its student-wing, the Islami Jamiat-e-Tulaba (IJT) to control the colleges and universities in the city. There is no doubt that the IJT was the most organised student group. It also had a militant streak. It could not be challenged by any other group except the Nationalist Students Federation (NSF). But the NSF faded in the face of IJT until a small student group representing Mohajir students and calling itself the All Pakistan Mohajir Student Organisation (APMSO) came on the scene. The IJT got its first real challenge at the hands of the APMSO. The APMSO exploited the issue of injustice meted out to the Urdu-speaking students: quota-system, admissions and lack of employment opportunities were some of the issues it raised. They soon attracted many ethnic Mohajir IJT students, who joined the APMSO. The IJT retaliated by using strong-arm tactics to put down the APMSO. This did not diminish the popularity of the APMSO but led to armed clashes and violence on the campuses. In 1986, the founder members of the APMSO launched the Mohajir Qaumi Movement (now Mutahidda Qaumi Movement). A pharmacy student, Altaf Hussain, from the University of Karachi led the MQM. Hussain was earlier sentenced to nine months in prison by a military court for allegedly burning a Pakistani flag.
The MQM were able to eject the JI from Karachi for a time, by being more violent than them, but the Pak establishment declared war on them which diverted their attention and resources. The JI has made a big come back in Karachi of late.

But the watershed year was 1984. In that year Karachi took a violent turn and life has never been normal in the city since then. It all started with a simple road accident in which a bus overran a college girl, Bushra Zaidi. This led to Mohajir-Pashtun riots since the city transport was mostly run by Pashtun companies while the girl who got killed was a Mohajir. The accident provided the pretext for long simmering tensions to come out in the open. Despite Zia’s utmost efforts to finish off the PPP, including murdering its founder-chairman Mr Bhutto through a judicial process, the party remained the most potent threat to his regime. At first Zia wanted to divide the PPP but failed in that venture. He and his cronies then changed the tactic and planned to divide Sindh, the PPP’s stronghold.
Ironically, the Army has continued to be tight with Fazl and the Jihadi groups at least in part to weaken the PPP. The increasing fundamentalism in the country has certainly ejected the PPP from the NWFP.

This led to his courting the MQM in urban Sindh and Sindhi nationalists in rural Sindh. The MQM and the Jeay Sindh founder G M Syed had one thing in common: a hatred for the PPP. MQM blamed Mr Bhutto for the injustices to the Mohajirs while Syed always termed the PPP as the agent of Punjab. Syed was also opposed to the Movement for the Restoration of Democracy. Indeed, some observers say in the initial days of the MQM, the party workers were given arms and training by Jeay Sindh activists. However, very soon the establishment started feeling the threat from a strong Sindhi-Mohajir axis. The rise of the MQM was also seen as a threat to Punjab. In circumstances that still remain mysterious, the MQM procession was first fired at near Sohrab Goth and then a clash was orchestrated between the Mohajirs and Sindhis in Hyderabad on the petty issue of changing the name of Hyder Bux Jatoi chowk in that city. Both events led to a schism between the two ethnic communities. Zia’s death on August 17, 1988 in a plane crash changed the political scenario in the country. Elections were announced, but just a month before the polls the country saw the worst terrorist attack. Some 200 people were killed in merely ten minutes in Hyderabad, mostly Mohajirs after unidentified gunmen opened fire on them. The next day some 150 people, this time mostly Sindhis, were killed in Karachi. Until today, the massacres remain a big mystery. However, all sides are convinced that the attacks were orchestrated by intelligence agencies.

MQM swept the polls in urban Sindh while the PPP secured the most seats in rural Sindh. The province was polarised and remains so until the writing of this report. The polls also allowed the MQM to flex its muscles and the party began to run Karachi and Hyderabad as its fiefdoms. Since then all political opponents have complained of MQM’s Dr Jekyll-Mr Hyde character. However, the agencies then split the MQM in 1991 and created another, Haqiqi group, which they supported from the eve of the military operation in 1992 until the original MQM was declared a patriotic party once again and, today, enjoys the fruits of its rapprochement with the establishment. But the intervening years saw infighting between the two groups that generated much violence in Karachi with both sides targeting each other’s activists, killing them mercilessly and dumping the chopped bodies on the streets in gunny bags. It also give rise to militancy in the MQM because of its strong power. The army operation in 1992 and the agencies’ naked backing of the Haqiqis also did much to revive the waning fortunes of the MQM. Indeed, while the establishment kept supporting the Haqiqis until as recently as 2002, the group could never emerge as a viable political force to challenge the MQM.
All the police officers in Karachi who were encouraged to summarily execute members of the MQM during the 90’s now find themselves in a city run by the party, which has reduced their life expectancy somewhat. The Haqiqi’s have been dumped by the establishment, so they have made contacts with the Jihadis, and have offered their death sqauds to them.

The post 9/11 years have added the element of religious terrorism to Karachi’s woes. The city hit international headlines when Al Qaeda activists were caught from here and after a Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl was kidnapped and then beheaded by religious militants. The city has also seen increased activity by religious terrorist groups, suicide bombings and other attacks, including sectarian killings. As things stand, Karachi is poised to go from bad to worse. To this situation everyone has contributed: from political parties to the religious groups to the establishment and even the citizens themselves. But its troubles do not just stop here. Its infrastructure is creaky and about to wither off. It is controlled by mafias of every conceivable type and denomination. Its parks, roads and buildings have been destroyed and the powerful, both political and criminal (sometimes it means the same), have broken every law in the book to put scars on Karachi’s face. It may be Pakistan’s commercial hub but it is calling out for help. General Musharraf belongs to this city. He has a vision for Pakistan: a modern, progressive and economically viable city. Without Karachi, that vision cannot come to fruition. Can he do something to restore this city to its old peace and glory?
Link


India-Pakistan
PML-Q Names Candidate for PM
2002-11-02
Pakistan's pro-military government party nominated its candidate for the post of Prime Minister in the recently elected but splintered national parliament, party officials said Saturday, November 2. The Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid (PML-Q), which scored the highest tally with 103 seats won in the October 10 polls, formally agreed to nominate Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali.
We knew that...
No single party secured the simple majority required to form a government in the 342-seat house in the first polls since President Pervez Musharraf seized power in a bloodless coup in October 1999. Parties remain deadlocked some three weeks after the elections, despite frantic efforts to form coalitions. Hussain said Jamali's nomination followed consultations with the pro-government National Alliance and the Muhajir-based Mutahidda Qaumi Movement (MQM), which together control 33 seats.
That makes 136 seats...
The PML-Q parliamentary leader said his party did not need to enter into a coalition with the opposition Pakistan People's Party (PPP) of banned ex-premier Benazir Bhutto - which landed 80 seats, the second highest number in the polls.
They don't want to ally with Benazir's party because it's so dirty...
Hussain also said there would be no need for the PML-Q to coalesce with the newly-powerful Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) alliance of six Islamic parties, which won an unexpectedly high 59 seats.
... and they don't want to ally with the fundos because they're all lunatix. Glad I'm not a Pak pol... Glad I'm not a Pak, for that matter.
Link



Warning: Undefined property: stdClass::$T in /data/rantburg.com/www/rantburg/pgrecentorg.php on line 132
-12 More